AMX Mouse
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
AMX Mouse was a 1985 computer mouse sold by the British company Advanced Memory Systems.[1] The mouse has 3 buttons. It was sold with a dedicated interface, and usually with some accompanying software such as AMX Art (MacPaint clone), AMX Pagemaker, AMX Palette, AMX Control and Icon Designer.[2]

![]() | |
Connects to | |
---|---|
Common manufacturers | Advanced Memory Systems |
Introduced | 1985 |
Type | computer mouse |
Market
The AMX Mouse product was sold for the ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC and BBC Micro computers,[3][4] along with the Acorn Electron (through Advanced Computer Products),[5][6] these being popular home computers at the time. As such, it allowed modern user interfaces to be present in common household machines.
It was compatible with art software such as OCP Advanced Art Studio[7] or Max Desktop.[8] The game Starglider is also listed as being compatible.[9]
Other software
Other available software from the manufacturer was:[4]
- AMX 3D Zicon which took 3D vector drawings and converted them to AMX Art format. Also allowed sketching in 2D and converting to 3D;
- AMX Database which was a database with a graphical user interface;
- AMX XAM which created multiple choice exams with pictures from AMX Art;
- AMX Paintpot which coloured pictures produced with AMX Art.
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.